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Jack H----------------------------------------------------------------off May 2026

Jack ran for a touchdown. When he crossed the goal line, he spiked the ball with the kind of elation only a child can show. His teammates mobbed him. The crowd erupted in a standing ovation that lasted several minutes. Many were crying. Sportscasters across the country ran the clip on loop.

During a team meeting in the fall of 2012, Burkhead asked Coach Pelini if Jack could suit up for the spring game. The idea was simple: Let Jack experience one carry, just for fun. No one could have predicted what happened next. April 6, 2013. Memorial Stadium, Lincoln, Nebraska. More than 60,000 fans had shown up for the annual Red-White scrimmage. But this year, the crowd was different. Word had spread about Jack. Many in attendance wore grey "Team Jack" t-shirts. Jack ran for a touchdown

Nebraska’s spring game attendance has since declined, and the program has struggled to recapture its 1990s glory. But the "Team Jack" moment remains untarnished. It is the Huskers’ most significant win of the 21st century—not a trophy, but an act of grace. As of this writing, Jack Hoffman is 19 years old. He has outlived his initial prognosis by more than a decade. He lives in Atkinson, Nebraska, with his family. He attends special education classes, loves playing video games (especially "Mario Kart"), and still watches every Huskers game on TV. He rarely gives interviews because his speech has been affected by the tumors and treatments, but when he does, he always says the same thing: "Go Big Red." The crowd erupted in a standing ovation that

Jack started running to his left, followed by a wall of 250-pound offensive linemen who had been instructed to block, but not to hurt anyone. As Jack cut upfield, the White team’s defensive players—all of them Division I athletes—did something extraordinary. They parted like the Red Sea. They dove out of the way, feigned shoestring tackles, and essentially escorted the little boy in the No. 22 jersey all the way to the end zone. During a team meeting in the fall of